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Word Meanings - SANCTIFY - Book Publishers vocabulary database

1. To make sacred or holy; to set apart to a holy or religious use; to consecrate by appropriate rites; to hallow. God blessed the seventh day and sanctified it. Gen. ii. 3. Moses . . . sanctified Aaron and his garnment. Lev. viii. 30. 2. To make

Additional info about word: SANCTIFY

1. To make sacred or holy; to set apart to a holy or religious use; to consecrate by appropriate rites; to hallow. God blessed the seventh day and sanctified it. Gen. ii. 3. Moses . . . sanctified Aaron and his garnment. Lev. viii. 30. 2. To make free from sin; to cleanse from moral corruption and pollution; to purify. Sanctify them through thy truth. John xvii. 17. 3. To make efficient as the means of holiness; to render productive of holiness or piety. A means which his mercy hath sanctified so to me as to make me repent of that unjust act. Eikon Basilike. 4. To impart or impute sacredness, venerableness, inviolability, title to reverence and respect, or the like, to; to secure from violation; to give sanction to. The holy man, amazed at what he saw, Made haste to sanctify the bliss by law. Dryden. Truth guards the poet, sanctifies the line. Pope.

Possible synonyms: (Same meaning words of SANCTIFY)

Related words: (words related to SANCTIFY)

  • HALLOW
    To make holy; to set apart for holy or religious use; to consecrate; to treat or keep as sacred; to reverence. "Hallowed be thy name." Matt. vi. 9. Hallow the Sabbath day, to do no work therein. Jer. xvii. 24. His secret altar touched with hallowed
  • ENSHRINE
    To inclose in a shrine or chest; hence, to preserve or cherish as something sacred; as, to enshrine something in memory. We will enshrine it as holy relic. Massinger.
  • DEVOTE
    1. To appropriate by vow; to set apart or dedicate by a solemn act; to consecrate; also, to consign over; to doom; to evil; to devote one to destruction; the city was devoted to the flames. No devoted thing that a man shall devote unto the Lord
  • DEVOTED
    Consecrated to a purpose; strongly attached; zealous; devout; as, a devoted admirer. -- De*vot"ed*ly, adv. -- De*vot"ed*ness, n.
  • DEVOTEMENT
    The state of being devoted, or set apart by a vow. Bp. Hurd.
  • REVERENCER
    One who regards with reverence. "Reverencers of crowned heads." Swift.
  • SANCTIFYINGLY
    In a manner or degree tending to sanctify or make holy.
  • DEDICATE
    Dedicated; set apart; devoted; consecrated. "Dedicate to nothing temporal." Shak. Syn. -- Devoted; consecrated; addicted. (more info) to dedicate; de- + dicare to declare, dedicate; akin to dicere to
  • HALLOWEEN
    The evening preceding Allhallows or All Saints' Day. Burns.
  • CONSECRATER
    Consecrator.
  • SANCTIFY
    1. To make sacred or holy; to set apart to a holy or religious use; to consecrate by appropriate rites; to hallow. God blessed the seventh day and sanctified it. Gen. ii. 3. Moses . . . sanctified Aaron and his garnment. Lev. viii. 30. 2. To make
  • DEVOTER
    One who devotes; a worshiper.
  • DEDICATEE
    One to whom a thing is dedicated; -- correlative to dedicator.
  • HALLOWMAS
    The feast of All Saints, or Allhallows. To speak puling, like a beggar at Hallowmas. Shak.
  • CONSECRATE
    Consecrated; devoted; dedicated; sacred. They were assembled in that consecrate place. Bacon.
  • REVERENCE
    1. Profound respect and esteem mingled with fear and affection, as for a holy being or place; the disposition to revere; veneration. If thou be poor, farewell thy reverence. Chaucer. Reverence, which is the synthesis of love and fear. Coleridge.
  • DEVOTEE
    One who is wholly devoted; esp., one given wholly to religion; one who is superstitiously given to religious duties and ceremonies; a bigot. While Father Le Blanc was very devout he was not a devotee. A. S. Hardy.
  • VENERATE
    To regard with reverential respect; to honor with mingled respect and awe; to reverence; to revere; as, we venerate parents and elders. And seemed to venerate the sacred shade. Dryden. I do not know a man more to be venerated for uprightness of
  • INDEVOTE
    Not devoted. Bentley. Clarendon.
  • DECONSECRATE
    To deprive of sacredness; to secularize. -- De*con`se*cra"tion, n.
  • DISCONSECRATE
    To deprive of consecration or sacredness.
  • UNHALLOWED
    Not consecrated; hence, profane; unholy; impious; wicked. In the cause of truth, no unhallowed violence . . . is either necessary or admissible. E. D. Griffin.
  • UNREVERENCE
    Absence or lack of reverence; irreverence. Wyclif.
  • SHALLOW-BRAINED
    Weak in intellect; foolish; empty-headed. South.
  • DISREVERENCE
    To treat irreverently or with disrespect. Sir T. More.
  • MISCONSECRATE
    To consecrate amiss. "Misconsecrated flags." Bp. Hall.
  • SHALLOW-WAISTED
    Having a flush deck, or with only a moderate depression amidships; -- said of a vessel.
  • SHALLOW
    schalowe, probably originally, sloping or shelving; cf. Icel. skjalgr wry, squinting, AS. sceolh, D. & G. scheel, OHG. schelah. Cf. Shelve 1. Not deep; having little depth; shoal. "Shallow brooks, and rivers wide." Milton. 2. Not deep in tone.
  • UNCONSECRATE
    To render not sacred; to deprive of sanctity; to desecrate. South.
  • ALLHALLOW
    The evening before Allhallows. See Halloween.
  • ALLHALLOW; ALLHALLOWS
    1. All the saints . 2. All Saints' Day, November 1st.

 

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